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Spinning Propellers Logo Origin Debunked

How many times have we heard this neat story about how the BMW logo is originally a pictoral representation of an airplane propellers spinning look? I know I've told the story & heard others tell it as well.

Finally we get some excellent commentary about the actual origins of the story & how some of us have been mistaken all these years, looks aside.

The March 2013 issue of BMW ON, pages 114 & 115 have told the story nicely. My thanks to the anonymous author for setting the record straight.

To see it online, I think a person needs to be logged in to view. Here is the link - go to page 115, the page numbering is different than the hardcopy.

Here is a text only version, sorry no pics.

All About The Roundel

Although BMW Motorrad will be celebrating its 90th anniversary in 2013, the BMW roundel was actually registered more than 95 years ago and has sincegone on to become one of the world‘«÷s most recognized and revered commercial symbols. Many people believe the design is connected with aircraft engines because of the apparent ‘«£spinning propellers,‘«ō but this is just a myth, as the interesting history of the roundel reveals.

In July 1917, Franz Josef Popp registered the name Bayerische Motoren Werke, thus distancing the new company from the former Rapp Motorenwerke aero engine company. This was a necessary move if the new company was to find new clients and prosper. The name was registered but there was no new logo. It was on Oct. 5, 1917, that the BMW trademark was registered with the Imperial Trade Mark Roll under No. 221388. It featured the circular design of the Rapp logo but with the letters BMW at the top of the outer ring. The inner featured quadrants in the Bavarian Free State colors of blue and white ‘«Ű but in the opposed order ‘«Ű as it was illegal to use national symbols in a commercial trademark.

The design was not in any way connected with aircraft engines or propellers. The idea that the blue and white had anything to do with spinning propellers comes from a 1929 advertisement, which featured aircraft with the image of the roundel in the rotating propellers. This advertisement came at the beginning of the Great Depression, which coincided with BMW acquiring the license to build Pratt & Whitney radial aircraft engines. The advertising department used the roundel and BMW heritage in an attempt to increase sales of the new radial engines.

The idea of the spinning propellers was given greater credence in an article by Wilhelm Farrenkopf in a BMW journal of 1942. This also featured an image of an aircraft with a spinning roundel. These were powerful images and the legend of the spinning propeller was born.

The logo was registered on Oct. 5, but it was in limited use prior to this date. On Oct. 1, 1917, Franz Josef Popp was given a certificate confirming his appointment as general manager and it was adorned with the now familiar BMW roundel.

The basic structure of the roundel has remained the same over 90 years, but there have been subtle changes. In the original design the lettering and outline were in gold, but by the time the first BMW motorcycle ‘«Ű the R32 ‘«Ű was released in 1923, it had changed slightly. The letters were still in gold but the font was bolder and letters closer together. This was the style that was submitted to the German Register of Trade Marks in 1933 and the international register of trademarks in 1934. This did not stop various versions being used.

One of the early BMW advertisements using the logo was in 1918 with the ‘«£falling roundels.‘«ō This was a positioning advertisement that was designed to establish the brand and give an indication to its current and future products.

Subsequent advertisements, posters and even cars and motorcycles also featured many styles of roundel. The proportions and the shade of blue changed, and the lettering could be in gold, white or silver with serif or sans serif fonts in different sizes. There appears to be no reason for this variance except for product designers and marketing and communication staff using personal choice depending on application.

Through the 1950s there was a more concerted effort to standardize the roundel. The use of white lettering was now standard and, when used on cars and motorcycles, it was silver. By the 1960s the serif font was replaced by sans serif, and this was used on all motorcycles by 1966.

There was a subsequent change to a slightly bolder font and this has remained as the standard roundel. There was flirtation with a ‘«£Motorsport roundel‘«ō in the early 1970s and ‘«ˇ80s, which had the standard logo surrounded by the BMW Motorsport colors. In 1997 BMW moved to having the roundel depicted in 3-D when used in the printed form. This gives the roundel a new bolder and dynamic look.

The BMW roundel is now ranked in the top ten of the world‘«÷s most recognized commercial logos and is an iconic symbol in its own right. The original design, in its simplicity and symbolism, has stood the test of time.